Abstract

BackgroundA number of allele replacement methods can be used to mutate bacterial genes. For instance, the Red recombinase system of phage Lambda has been used very efficiently to inactivate chromosomal genes in E. coli K-12, through recombination between regions of homology. However, this method does not work reproducibly in some clinical E. coli isolates.FindingsThe procedure was modified by using longer homologous regions (85 bp and 500-600 bp), to inactivate genes in the uropathogenic E. coli strain UTI89. An lrhA regulator mutant, and deletions of the lac operon as well as the complete type 1 fimbrial gene cluster, were obtained reproducibly. The modified method is also functional in other recalcitrant E. coli, like the avian pathogenic E. coli strain APEC1. The lrhA regulator and lac operon deletion mutants of APEC1 were successfully constructed in the same way as the UTI89 mutants. In other avian pathogenic E. coli strains (APEC3E, APEC11A and APEC16A) it was very difficult or impossible to construct these mutants, with the original Red recombinase-based method, with a Red recombinase-based method using longer (85 bp) homologous regions or with our modified protocol, using 500 - 600 bp homologous regions.ConclusionsThe method using 500-600 bp homologous regions can be used reliably in some clinical isolates, to delete single genes or entire operons by homologous recombination. However, it does not invariably show a greater efficiency in obtaining mutants, when compared to the original Red-mediated gene targeting method or to the gene targeting method with 85 bp homologous regions. Therefore the length of the homology regions is not the only limiting factor for the construction of mutants in these recalcitrant strains.

Highlights

  • A number of allele replacement methods can be used to mutate bacterial genes

  • Gene replacement in avian pathogenic E. coli We investigated whether the overlap Polymerase chain reactions (PCR)-based method was functional in the avian pathogenic E. coli strain APEC1

  • We investigated whether the overlap PCR-based method was functional in the avian pathogenic E. coli strains APEC3E, APEC11A and APEC16A (See Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

A number of allele replacement methods can be used to mutate bacterial genes. The Red recombinase system of phage Lambda has been used very efficiently to inactivate chromosomal genes in E. coli K-12, through recombination between regions of homology. This method does not work reproducibly in some clinical E. coli isolates. A number of allele replacement methods were developed to mutate bacterial genes. An elegant method, based on homologous recombination, mediated by the Red system of phage Lambda, is used routinely for the construction of deletion mutants in E. coli K-12 [4]. Pathogenic E. coli isolates are often more challenging to manipulate genetically than this laboratory strain.

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